Various body configurations capitalize upon the interchangeability of vehicle bodies on a flat rolling chassis. The ability to interchange vehicle bodies and exchange modular interior components enables substantial freedom and variation in the types of automobile, trucks, heavy equipment, machinery, RV bodies, etc. that can be interchanged on a rolling chassis. Various seating arrangements may be provided as well as enhanced space utilization, and different types of interior and exterior environments, aesthetics and functionality, including sound, lighting, and other technology enhancements may be provided on a body. Methods and structures facilitate the exchange of modular body components, such as via a removable body floor.
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4. For use in combination with a vehicle chassis, a vehicle body comprising:
an enclosure configured to shelter a vehicle occupant;
a driver communication interface positioned within the enclosure to communicate electronic vehicle control signals to the chassis from a vehicle driver; and
a chassis-attachment interface connected to the enclosure and configured for selective attachment to the chassis, said chassis-attachment interface including an electrical connector being operatively connected to said driver communication interface to receive said electronic vehicle control signals and being engageable with a complementary connector on the vehicle chassis.
1. A vehicle body configured for attachment to a chassis, the body comprising:
a body floor configured to extend substantially the entire length of the chassis;
a seat assembly supported by the floor;
a driver interface supported with respect to the floor adjacent the seat assembly to communicate vehicle control signals to the chassis from a seated driver;
an interface operatively connected to the floor configured for attachment to the chassis, said interface including at least one electrical connector operatively connected to the driver interface to receive the vehicle control signals; and
wherein said interface is configured to conform to a standardized interface system wherein mechanical and electrical connection components of the body and chassis complement each other and are sufficiently aligned such that different styles of conforming bodies may be mated to any conforming chassis without need for modification to either the chassis or body to facilitate attachment.
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This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/205,501, filed Jul. 24, 2002, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Nos. 60/314,501 and 60/337,994, filed Aug. 23, 2001 and Dec. 7, 2001, respectively, application Ser. Nos. 10/205,501, 60/314,501, and 60/337,994 are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties
The present invention relates to vehicle body configurations which stem from a flat rolling chassis design with interchangeable bodies.
Mobility, being capable of moving from place to place or of moving quickly from one state to another, has been one of the ultimate goals of humanity throughout recorded history. The automobile has likely done more in helping individuals achieve that goal than any other development. Since its inception, societies around the globe have experienced rates of change in their manner of living that are directly related to the percentage of motor vehicle owners among the population.
Prior art automobiles and light trucks include a body, the function of which is to contain and protect passengers and their belongings. Bodies are connected to the numerous mechanical, electrical, and structural components that, in combination with a body, comprise a fully functional vehicle. The nature of the prior art connections between a vehicle body and vehicular componentry may result in certain inefficiencies in the design, manufacture, and use of vehicles. Three characteristics of prior art body connections that significantly contribute to these inefficiencies are the quantity of connections; the mechanical nature of many of the connections; and the locations of the connections on the body and on the componentry.
In the prior art, the connections between a body and componentry are numerous. Each connection involves at least one assembly step when a vehicle is assembled; it is therefore desirable to reduce the number of connections to increase assembly efficiency. The connections between a prior art body and prior art vehicular componentry include multiple load-bearing connectors to physically fasten the body to the other components, such as bolts and brackets; electrical connectors to transmit electrical energy to the body from electricity-generating components and to transmit data from sensors that monitor the status of the componentry; mechanical control linkages, such as the steering column, throttle cable, and transmission selector; and ductwork and hoses to convey fluids such as heated and cooled air from an HVAC unit to the body for the comfort of passengers.
Many of the connections in the prior art, particularly those connections that transmit control signals, are mechanical linkages. For example, to control the direction of the vehicle, a driver sends control signals to the steering system via a steering column. Mechanical linkages result in inefficiencies, in part, because different driver locations in different vehicles require different mechanical linkage dimensions and packaging. Thus, new or different bodies often cannot use “off-the-shelf” components and linkages. Componentry for one vehicle body configuration is typically not compatible for use with other vehicle body configurations. Furthermore, if a manufacturer changes the design of a body, a change in the design of the mechanical linkage and the component to which it is attached may be required. The change in design of the linkages and components requires modifications to the tooling that produces the linkages and components.
The location of the connections on prior art vehicle bodies and componentry also results in inefficiencies. In prior art body-on-frame architecture, connection locations on the body are often not exposed to an exterior face of the body, and are distant from corresponding connections on the componentry; therefore, long connectors such as wiring harnesses and cables must be routed throughout the body from componentry. The vehicle body of a fully-assembled prior art vehicle is intertwined with the componentry and the connection devices, rendering separation of the body from its componentry difficult and labor-intensive, if not impossible. The use of long connectors increases the number of assembly steps required to attach a vehicle to its componentry.
Furthermore, prior art vehicles typically have internal combustion engines that have a height that is a significant proportion of the overall vehicle height. Prior art vehicle bodies are therefore designed with an engine compartment that occupies about a third of the front (or sometimes the rear) of the body length. Compatibility between an engine and a vehicle body requires that the engine fit within the body's engine compartment without physical part interference. Moreover, compatibility between a prior art chassis with an internal combustion engine and a vehicle body requires that the body have an engine compartment located such that physical part interference is avoided. For example, a vehicle body with an engine compartment in the rear is not compatible with a chassis with an engine in the front.
A self-contained chassis has substantially all of the mechanical, electrical, and structural componentry necessary for a fully functional vehicle, including at least an energy conversion system, a suspension and wheels, a steering system, and a braking system. The chassis has a simplified, and preferably standardized, interface with connection components to which bodies of substantially varying design can be attached. X-by-wire technology is utilized to eliminate mechanical control linkages.
As a result, the amount of time and resources required to design and manufacture new vehicle bodies are reduced. Body designs need only conform to the simple attachment interface of the chassis, eliminating the need to redesign or reconfigure expensive components.
Further, a multitude of body configurations share a common chassis, enabling economies of scale for major mechanical, electrical, and structural components.
Connection components, exposed and unobstructed, increase manufacturing efficiency because attachment of a body to the chassis requires only engagement of the connection components to respective complementary connection components on a vehicle body.
Vehicle owners can increase the functionality of their vehicles at a lower cost than possible with the prior art because a vehicle owner need buy only one chassis upon which to mount a multitude of body styles.
A vehicle body in accordance with the invention may be configured for attachment to a chassis and include a body floor configured to extend substantially the entire length of the chassis. A seat assembly is attached to the body floor, and a driver interface is supported with respect to the floor adjacent the seat assembly to communicate vehicle control signals to a chassis from a driver. An interface is exposed on a bottom surface of the floor and configured for attachment to the chassis. The body may further comprise an enclosure connected to the floor for sheltering occupants within the body, wherein the enclosure is connected to opposing ends of the floor such that the enclosure extends substantially the entire length of the floor so that substantially the entire length of the floor is accessible and usable space for occupants. The body enclosure may be selected from the group consisting of sedans, pick-up trucks, convertibles, coupes, vans, station wagons, sport-utility vehicles, and other types of transports.
The interface is preferably configured to conform to a standardized interface system wherein mechanical and electrical connection components of the body and chassis complement each other and are sufficiently aligned such that any conforming body may be mated to any conforming chassis without need for modification to either the chassis or body to facilitate attachment, thereby enabling a variety of different styles of bodies to be attached to the chassis.
The body enclosure may include a body skeleton structure having body openings formed therein, each of which is covered by a non-metal close-out panel. The non-metal close-out panels may comprise materials selected from the group consisting of fabric, wood, plastic, rubber, nylon, webbing, canvas and mylar. The non-metal close-out panels are preferably removably attached over the body openings to facilitate interchangeability. It is particularly notable that the hood and fenders may include such materials because there is no engine under the hood.
A method of conducting a vehicle business transaction with a customer in accordance with the present invention includes: A) granting possession of a body floor to the customer in a financial transaction separately from a chassis; and B) attaching individual vehicle body components to the body floor after the step of granting possession of the body floor. Possession of the body floor may be granted with or without an attached body enclosure. The modular individual body components may be installed or exchanged by a mobile body parts service unit at a remote location selected by a customer, such as the customer's home.
The modular individual body components may be attached to the floor or elsewhere on the body. The modular individual body components may include interior components, such as pre-validated seats, consoles, driver interfaces, steering devices, drive-by-wire input devices, entertainment systems, and communication systems. The modular individual body components may further include exterior components such as pre-validated doors, fenders, hoods, windows, quarter panels, bumpers and body structural members.
The individual body components may be rented, sold, leased, financed, or provided through a club membership.
A method is further provided in accordance with the present invention for remanufacturing a vehicle including a floor, a body enclosure supported above the floor, and modular individual body components connected to the floor. The method includes detaching the floor from the body enclosure to facilitate removal of a modular individual body components; and installing replacement body components on the body. The installing step may include installing a replacement floor having the replacement body components therein. Alternatively, the installing step may include installing the replacement components on the floor after the floor has been attached, and re-installing the same floor with the replacement body components thereon. The detaching and installing steps may be performed by a mobile service unit at a remote location selected by a customer, or in a specialized service station.
The above objects, features, advantages, and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best modes for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
Lateral structural elements 34, 36 extend between elements 20, 30 and 22, 32, respectively nearer the front axle area 16 and lateral structural elements 38, 40 extend between elements 20, 30 and 22, 32, respectively nearer the rear axle area 18, thereby defining a mid-chassis space 41. The front axle area 16 is defined in and around structural elements 43, 44 at the rear and front, and on the sides by structural elements 46, 48 which may be extensions of the elements 20, 22, 30, 32 or connected therewith. Forward of the front axle area, a forward space is defined between element 44 and elements 50, 52. The rear axle area 18 is defined in and around structural elements 53, 54 at the front and rear, and on the sides by structural elements 56, 58, which may be extensions of the elements 20, 22, 30, 32 or connected therewith. Rearward of the rear axle area 18, a rearward space is defined between element 54 and elements 60, 62. Alternatively, the rear axle area 18 or the rearward space may be elevated relative to the rest of the structural frame 11 if necessary to accommodate an energy conversion system, and the frame may include other elements to surround and protect an energy conversion system. The frame defines a plurality of open spaces between the elements described above. Those skilled in the art will recognize materials and fastening methods suitable for use in the structural frame. For example, the structural elements may be tubular, aluminum, and welded at their respective connections to other structural elements.
The structural frame 11 provides a rigid structure to which an energy conversion system 67, energy storage system 69, suspension system 71 with wheels 73, 75, 77, 79 (each wheel having a tire 80), steering system 81, and braking system 83 are mounted, as shown in
Referring to
As shown in
The electrical connector 91 is engageable with a complementary electrical connector 95 on a vehicle body 85. The electrical connector 91 of the preferred embodiment may perform multiple functions, or select combinations thereof. First, the electrical connector 91 may function as an electrical power connector, i.e., it may be configured to transfer electrical energy generated by components on the chassis 10 to a vehicle body 85 or other non-chassis destination. Second, the electrical connector 91 may function as a control signal receiver, i.e., a device configured to transfer control signals from a non-chassis source to controlled systems including the energy conversion system, steering system, and braking system. Third, the electrical connector 91 may function as a feedback signal conduit through which feedback signals are made available to a vehicle driver. Fourth, the electrical connector 91 may function as an external programming interface through which software containing algorithms and data may be transmitted for use by controlled systems. Fifth, the electrical connector may function as an information conduit through which sensor information and other information is made available to a vehicle driver. The electrical connector 91 may thus function as a communications and power “umbilical” port through which all communications between the chassis 10 and an attached vehicle body 85 are transmitted. Electrical connectors include devices configured to operably connect one or more electrical wires with other electrical wires. The wires may be spaced a distance apart to avoid any one wire causing signal interference in another wire operably connected to an electrical connector or for any reason that wires in close proximity may not be desirable.
If one electrical connector performing multiple functions is not desirable, for example, if a cumbersome wire bundle is required, or power transmission results in control signal interference, the body attachment interface 87 may include a plurality of electrical connectors 91 engageable with a plurality of complementary electrical connectors 95 on a vehicle body 85, with different connectors performing different functions. A complementary electrical connector 95 performs functions complementary to the function of the electrical connector with which it engages, for example, functioning as a control signal transmitter when engaged with a control signal receiver.
Referring again to
Referring again to
Most of the powertrain load is evenly distributed between the front and rear of the chassis so there is a lower center of gravity for the whole vehicle without sacrificing ground clearance, thereby enabling improved handling while resisting rollover forces.
Referring again to
Each body connection component has a spatial relationship relative to each of the other body connection components that can be expressed, for example, as a vector quantity. Body connection components and complementary connection components have the same predetermined spatial relationship if the vector quantities that describe the spatial relationship between a body connection component and the other body connection components to be engaged also describe the spatial relationship between a corresponding complementary connection component and the other complementary connection components to be engaged. For example, the spatial relationship may be defined as follows: a first body connection component is spaced a distance Ax+By from a reference point; a second body connection component is spaced a distance Cx+Dy from the reference point; a third body connection component is spaced a distance Ex+Fy from the reference point; etc. Corresponding complementary connection components in the same predetermined spatial relationship are spaced in a mirror image relationship in the lower body face, as depicted in
The body connection components and the complementary connection components are preferably adjacent without positional modification when a vehicle body 85 is sufficiently positioned relative to a chassis 10 of the invention; however, in the context of the present invention, the body connection components may be movable relative to each other within a predetermined spatial relationship to accommodate build-tolerances or other assembly issues. For example, an electrical connector may be positioned and operably connected to a signal-carrying cable. The cable may be fixed relative to the structural frame at a point six inches from the electrical connector. The electrical connector will thus be movable within six inches of the fixed point on the cable. A body connection component is considered adjacent to a complementary connection component if one or both are movable within a predetermined spatial relationship so as to be in contact with each other.
Referring to
The body connection components are preferably sufficiently exposed at a chassis face to facilitate attachment to complementary connection components on a matable vehicle body. Similarly, complementary connection components on a matable vehicle body are sufficiently exposed at a body face to facilitate attachment to body connection components on a vehicle chassis. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the body connection components are located at or above the upper chassis face for engagement with complementary connection components located at or below a lower body face.
It is within the scope of the claimed invention to employ a connection device to engage or operably connect a body connection component with a distant complementary connection component, in the situation where a vehicle body does not have complementary connection components in the same predetermined spatial relationship as the body connection components on a vehicle chassis. For example, a cable having two connectors, one connector engageable with the electrical connector on a body attachment interface and the other connector engageable with a complementary connector on a matable vehicle body, may be used to operably connect the electrical connector and the complementary connector.
The bodies 85, 85′, 85″ shown schematically in
A body may have more complementary connection components than are engageable with the body connection components of a particular chassis. Such an arrangement may be employed to enable a particular body to be matable to multiple chassis each having a different predetermined spatial relationship among its body connection components.
The load-bearing body-retention couplings 89 and the electrical connector 91 are preferably releasably engageable without damage to either an attached body 85 or the chassis 10, thereby enabling removal of one body 85 from the chassis 10 and installation of a different body 85′, 85″ on the chassis 10.
In the preferred embodiment, the body-attachment interface 87 is characterized by the absence of any mechanical control signal-transmission linkages and any couplings for attaching mechanical control signal-transmission linkages. Mechanical control linkages, such as steering columns, limit the compatibility between a chassis and bodies of different configurations.
Referring to
Referring to
The steering actuator 99 is operably connected to the front wheels 73, 75 and configured to adjust the steering angle of the front wheels 73, 75 in response to the steering actuator control signals 103. Actuators in a by-wire system transform electronic control signals into a mechanical action or otherwise influence a system's behavior in response to the electronic control signals. Examples of actuators that may be used in a by-wire system include electromechanical actuators such as electric servomotors, translational and rotational solenoids, magnetorheological actuators, electrohydraulic actuators, and electrorheological actuators. Those skilled in the art will recognize and understand mechanisms by which the steering angle is adjusted. In the preferred embodiment, the steering actuator 99 is an electric drive motor configured to adjust a mechanical steering rack.
Referring again to
The complementary electrical connector 95 is coupled with the electrical connector 91 of the body attachment interface 87. The steering transducer 104 converts vehicle driver-initiated mechanical steering control signals 105 to electrical steering control signals 102 which are transmitted via the electrical connector 91 to the steering control unit 98. In the preferred embodiment, the steering control unit 98 generates steering feedback signals 106 for use by a vehicle driver and transmits the steering feedback signals 106 through the electrical connector 91. Some of the sensors 100 monitor linear distance movement of the steering rack and vehicle speed. This information is processed by the steering control unit 98 according to a stored algorithm to generate the steering feedback signals 106. A torque control motor operably connected to the slide mechanism receives the steering feedback signals 106 and is driven in the opposite direction of the driver's mechanical input.
In the context of the present invention, a “by-wire” system may be an actuator connected directly to an electrical connector in the body attachment interface. An alternative by-wire steering system 81′ within the scope of the claimed invention is depicted schematically in
Examples of steer-by-wire systems are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,176,341, issued Jan. 23, 2001 to Delphi Technologies, Inc; U.S. Pat. No. 6,208,923, issued Mar. 27, 2001 to Robert Bosch GmbH; U.S. Pat. No. 6,219,604, issued Apr. 17, 2001 to Robert Bosch GmbH; U.S. Pat. No. 6,318,494, issued Nov. 20, 2001 to Delphi Technologies, Inc.; U.S. Pat. No. 6,370,460, issued Apr. 9, 2002 to Delphi Technologies, Inc.; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,394,218, issued May 28, 2002 to TRW Fahrwerksysteme GmbH & Co. KG; which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
The steer-by-wire system described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,176,341 includes a position sensor for sensing angular position of a road wheel, a hand-operated steering wheel for controlling direction of the road wheel, a steering wheel sensor for sensing position of the steering wheel, a steering wheel actuator for actuating the hand-operated steering wheel, and a steering control unit for receiving the sensed steering wheel position and the sensed road wheel position and calculating actuator control signals, preferably including a road wheel actuator control signal and a steering wheel actuator control signal, as a function of the difference between the sensed road wheel position and the steering wheel position. The steering control unit commands the road wheel actuator to provide controlled steering of the road wheel in response to the road wheel actuator control signal. The steering control unit further commands the steering wheel actuator to provide feedback force actuation to the hand-operated steering wheel in response to the steering wheel control signal. The road wheel actuator control signal and steering wheel actuator control signal are preferably scaled to compensate for difference in gear ratio between the steering wheel and the road wheel. In addition, the road wheel actuator control signal and steering wheel actuator control signal may each have a gain set so that the road wheel control actuator signal commands greater force actuation to the road wheel than the feedback force applied to the steering wheel.
The steer-by-wire system described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,176,341 preferably implements two position control loops, one for the road wheel and one for the hand wheel. The position feedback from the steering wheel becomes a position command input for the road wheel control loop and the position feedback from the road wheel becomes a position command input for the steering wheel control loop. A road wheel error signal is calculated as the difference between the road wheel command input (steering wheel position feedback) and the road wheel position. Actuation of the road wheel is commanded in response to the road wheel error signal to provide controlled steering of the road wheel. A steering wheel error signal is calculated as the difference between the steering wheel position command (road wheel position feedback) and the steering wheel position. The hand-operated steering wheel is actuated in response to the steering wheel error signal to provide force feedback to the hand-operated steering wheel.
The steering control unit of the '341 system could be configured as a single processor or multiple processors and may include a general-purpose microprocessor-based controller, that may include a commercially available off-the-shelf controller. One example of a controller is Model No. 87C196CA microcontroller manufactured and made available from Intel Corporation of Delaware. The steering control unit preferably includes a processor and memory for storing and processing software algorithms, has a clock speed of 16 MHz, two optical encoder interfaces to read position feedbacks from each of the actuator motors, a pulse width modulation output for each motor driver, and a 5-volt regulator.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,370,460 describes a steer-by-wire control system comprising a road wheel unit and a steering wheel unit that operate together to provide steering control for the vehicle operator. A steering control unit may be employed to support performing the desired signal processing. Signals from sensors in the road wheel unit, steering wheel unit, and vehicle speed are used to calculate road wheel actuator control signals to control the direction of the vehicle and steering wheel torque commands to provide tactile feedback to the vehicle operator. An Ackerman correction may be employed to adjust the left and right road wheel angles correcting for errors in the steering geometry to ensure that the wheels will track about a common turn center.
Referring again to
The braking control unit 107 may also generate braking feedback signals 114 for use by a vehicle driver and transmit the braking feedback signals 114 through the electrical connector 91. In the preferred embodiment, the braking actuators 110, 111, 112, 113 apply force through a caliper to a rotor at each wheel. Some of the sensors 100 measure the applied force on each caliper. The braking control unit 107 uses this information to ensure synchronous force application to each rotor.
Referring again to
An alternative brake-by-wire system 83′ within the scope of the claimed invention is depicted in
Examples of brake-by-wire systems are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,366,281, issued Nov. 22, 2994 to General Motors Corporation; U.S. Pat. No. 5,823,636, issued Oct. 20, 1998 to General Motors Corporation; U.S. Pat. No. 6,305,758, issued Oct. 23, 2001 to Delphi Technologies, Inc.; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,390,565, issued May 21, 2002 to Delphi Technologies, Inc.; which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
The system described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,366,281 includes an input device for receiving mechanical braking control signals, a brake actuator and a control unit coupled to the input device and the brake actuator. The control unit receives brake commands, or electrical braking control signals, from the input device and provides actuator commands, or braking actuator control signals, to control current and voltage to the brake actuator. When a brake command is first received from the input device, the control unit outputs, for a first predetermined time period, a brake torque command to the brake actuator commanding maximum current to the actuator. After the first predetermined time period, the control unit outputs, for a second predetermined time period, a brake torque command to the brake actuator commanding voltage to the actuator responsive to the brake command and a first gain factor. After the second predetermined time period, the control unit outputs the brake torque command to the brake actuator commanding current to the actuator responsive to the brake command and a second gain factor, wherein the first gain factor is greater than the second gain factor and wherein brake initialization is responsive to the brake input.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,390,565 describes a brake-by-wire system that provides the capability of both travel and force sensors in a braking transducer connected to a brake apply input member such as a brake pedal and also provides redundancy in sensors by providing the signal from a sensor responsive to travel or position of the brake apply input member to a first control unit and the signal from a sensor responsive to force applied to a brake apply input member to a second control unit. The first and second control units are connected by a bi-directional communication link whereby each controller may communicate its received one of the sensor signals to the other control unit. In at least one of the control units, linearized versions of the signals are combined for the generation of first and second brake apply command signals for communication to braking actuators. If either control unit does not receive one of the sensor signals from the other, it nevertheless generates its braking actuator control signal on the basis of the sensor signal provided directly to it. In a preferred embodiment of the system, a control unit combines the linearized signals by choosing the largest in magnitude.
Referring again to
The energy conversion system 67 converts the energy stored by the energy storage system 69 to mechanical energy that propels the chassis 10. In the preferred embodiment, depicted in
The fuel cell stack 125 is operably connected to the compressed gas cylinder storage tanks 121 and to the traction motor 127. The fuel cell stack 125 converts chemical energy in the form of hydrogen from the compressed gas cylinder storage tanks 121 into electrical energy, and the traction motor 127 converts the electrical energy to mechanical energy, and applies the mechanical energy to rotate the front wheels 73, 75. Optionally, the fuel cell stack 125 and traction motor 127 are switched between the front axle area 16 and rear axle area 18. Optionally, the energy conversion system includes an electric battery (not shown) in hybrid combination with the fuel cell to improve chassis acceleration. Other areas provided between the structural elements are useful for housing other mechanisms and systems for providing the functions typical of an automobile as shown in
The energy conversion system 67 is configured to respond to non-mechanical control signals. The energy conversion system 67 of the preferred embodiment is controllable by-wire, as depicted in
An energy conversion system transducer 132 may be located on a vehicle body 85 and connected to a complementary electrical connector 95 engaged with the electrical connector 91. The energy conversion system transducer 132 is configured to convert mechanical energy conversion system control signals 133 to electrical energy conversion system control signals 129.
In another embodiment of the invention, as shown schematically in
Referring again to
Referring again to
Referring to
In the preferred embodiment, the suspension control unit 141 is programmable and connected to the electrical connector 91 of the body-attachment interface 87. A vehicle user is thus able to alter suspension system 71 characteristics by reprogramming the suspension control unit 141 with suspension system software 147 via the electrical connector 91.
In the context of the claimed invention, electronically-controlled suspension systems include suspension systems without a suspension control unit located on the chassis 10. Referring to
Examples of electronically controlled suspension systems are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,606,503, issued Feb. 25, 1997 to General Motors Corporation; U.S. Pat. No. 5,609,353, issued Mar. 11, 1997 to Ford Motor Company; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,397,134, issued May 28, 2002 to Delphi Technologies, Inc.; which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,397,134 describes an electronically controlled suspension system that provides improved suspension control through steering crossover events. In particular, the system senses a vehicle lateral acceleration and a vehicle steering angle and stores, for each direction of sensed vehicle lateral acceleration, first and second sets of enhanced suspension actuator control signals for the suspension actuators of the vehicle. Responsive to the sensed vehicle lateral acceleration and sensed vehicle steering angle, the system applies the first set of enhanced actuator control signals to the suspension actuators if the sensed steering angle is in the same direction as the sensed lateral acceleration and alternatively applies the second set of enhanced actuator control signals to the suspension actuators if the sensed steering angle is in the opposite direction as the sensed lateral acceleration.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,606,503 describes a suspension control system for use in a vehicle including a suspended vehicle body, four un-suspended vehicle wheels, four variable force actuators mounted between the vehicle body and wheels, one of the variable force actuators at each corner of the vehicle, and a set of sensors providing sensor signals indicative of motion of the vehicle body, motion of the vehicle wheels, a vehicle speed and an ambient temperature. The suspension control system comprises a microcomputer control unit including: means for receiving the sensor signals; means, responsive to the sensor signals, for determining an actuator demand force for each actuator; means, responsive to the vehicle speed, for determining a first signal indicative of a first command maximum; means, responsive to the ambient temperature, for determining a second signal indicative of a second command maximum; and means for constraining the actuator demand force so that it is no greater than a lesser of the first and second command maximums.
Electrically conductive wires (not shown) are used in the preferred embodiment to transfer signals between the chassis 10 and an attached body 85, and between transducers, control units, and actuators. Those skilled in the art will recognize that other non-mechanical means of sending and receiving signals between a body and a chassis, and between transducers, control units, and actuators may be employed and fall within the scope of the claimed invention. Other non-mechanical means of sending and receiving signals include radio waves and fiber optics.
The by-wire systems are networked in the preferred embodiment, in part to reduce the quantity of dedicated wires connected to the electrical connector 91. A serial communication network is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,534,848, issued Jul. 9, 1996 to General Motors Corporation, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. An example of a networked drive-by-wire system is described in U.S. patent application Publication No. 2001/0029408, Ser. No. 09/775,143, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Those skilled in the art will recognize various networking devices and protocols that may be used within the scope of the claimed invention, such as SAE J1850 and CAN (“Controller Area Network”). A TTP (“Time Triggered Protocol”) network is employed in the preferred embodiment of the invention for communications management.
Some of the information collected by the sensors 100, such as chassis velocity, fuel level, and system temperature and pressure, is useful to a vehicle driver for operating the chassis and detecting system malfunctions. As shown in
One control unit may serve multiple functions. For example, as shown in
Referring again to
Referring to
The embodiment depicted in
Referring to
The manufacture of chassis or rolling platforms and body pods is depicted in
Engineering of the rolling platform enables the vehicle body to be designed and produced independently. Bodies are manufactured and designed substantially independently anywhere in the world to meet different consumer desires. Local manufacturers, using locally available materials, can build vehicle bodies according to local tastes. Without a coupled body, the rolling platform manufacturing process is streamlined for production at key manufacturing sites around the world for exportation to points of purchase. Designers have the ability to redesign vehicle bodies without reengineering the entire vehicle.
According to the embodiment shown in
Turning to
During the life of the rolling chassis, the vehicle is used according to their changing tastes or needs. For example, a scenario wherein a driver starts with a small, sporty body pod 226, advances to a utilitarian type body pod 228, then to a sport-utility type body pod 230, a van type body pod 232 and onto a station wagon type body pod 234 is possible. Of course, the type of body pods chosen and the time to change is completely discretionary.
The ability to interchange vehicle bodies provides freedom in the types of automobile, trucks, heavy equipment, machinery and RV bodies that can be interchanged on a chassis (a.k.a. rolling platform, rolling sandwich, skateboard, rolling chassis). Also, bodies can take full advantage of space utilization from the front to the rear of the rolling chassis as a result of the elimination of the traditional engine compartment. Body variations can range from a single center seat body with technology enhancements like voice controls and interactive communication features to a passenger bus body holding ten people and offering services like music and movie entertainment. The differences between bodies can encompass customer-themed environments of sound, lighting, and seating, to exterior and interior shapes, to technology enhancements and features like computer animation to holograms, depending on the desired driver and passenger experience.
Potential body options, benefits, and upgrades include telematics and entertainment options such as: matching telematics having an intelligent control and use of power, X-by-wire systems, and internal communications with the chassis to external communications with the world that may be automatically combined to give relevant situation and location-based functionality.
Further potential body options, benefits, and upgrades include different vehicle body themes such as: interiors representing global and futuristic environments; a Chinese (reality) living room, a Star Trek (T.V. show) control room, a cocoon safety featured body, a full featured entertainment (movies, sound, games, etc.) body, to a Tron (movie) like single person transporter, etc. Other traditional examples could include body characteristics like Sporting, Off-Road, Monday-Friday Commuter, Family Weekender, Office and Business Use, Bus, etc. Some bodies could be traditional vehicle bodies that have been updated and modified, like a '57 Chevy convertible body on the rolling platform, or the body could address extreme cultural needs and use materials like bamboo and transport bananas.
Additionally, vehicle platform dynamics and body content may be changed and upgraded to match consumer desires and demands. As new technology, functionality, etc. becomes available the body interior and exterior may be modified. Interior layouts, driving positions, and driver controls may change in response to customer needs. Customer interior needs may encompass storage options, seating layouts, entertainment enhancements, etc. Further, exterior needs may include storage, access, etc. Body upgrades may include changes to ride and drive characteristics to varying degrees of communications by software and hardware enhancements and modifications of the rolling platform.
Further body options, benefits, and upgrades include interchangeable interior adaptability, such as changes in seats, lighting, sound, color, architecture, access, storage, plug and play modularity, retractable shelves and trays, footrests, beds, docking port, visual screens, reconfigurable displays, vehicle controls, pop-up book interior features, and plug and play interior components that can clip or snap on and off, etc.
Referring to
As shown, the business method 260 includes installing individual modular body components on a body in a factory (step 262). The individual modular body components may be installed on a body floor or a body enclosure. The body components may be selected by a customer to personalize the vehicle to that particular customer's tastes or functional needs. After body components are installed on the body floor and/or body enclosure, the body enclosure may be attached to the body floor (step 264) before granting possession of the vehicle in a financial transaction (step 266), which may comprise a lease, sale, rental, financing arrangement, or club membership. Alternatively, the body components may be installed on the body (step 262) and possession of the vehicle granted (step 266) without an intermediate step of attaching the body enclosure to the body floor. In this instance, the body enclosure would have been attached to the body floor prior to the step of installing body components in the factory (step 262). Accordingly, the various steps may be selectively performed by different business entities.
Another option is to grant possession of the body floor in a financial transaction (step 268) separately from the body enclosure. Similarly, possession of the body enclosure may be granted in a financial transaction (step 270) separately from a body floor. Thereafter, the body floor may be attached to the body enclosure (step 272) at a specialized mobile or stationary service station.
Access to replacement modular body components may be offered via lease, sale, rental, financing arrangement, or club membership (step 274). In this manner, the factory-installed modular (exchangeable) body components may be exchanged with replacement modular body components (step 276). This exchange may be performed by a mobile body parts service unit at a remote location selected by the customer, such as the customer's driveway or place of business (step 278), or in a specialized garage (step 280).
The replacement body components may include interior components, such as prevalidated seats, consoles, driver interfaces, steering devices, by-wire controls, entertainment systems, communications systems, etc. (step 282). The modular body components to be exchanged may further include exterior components, such as prevalidated doors, fenders, hoods, windows, quarter panels, bumpers, structural members, etc. (step 284).
As further illustrated in
Further, as shown in
The ability to load the body interior through a body opening or remove the body floor structure and replace it with a different floor structure with the new interior provides several benefits. It increases throughput of the vehicles due to the modularity of the manufacturing components, and also enables vehicles to be provided more quickly in the market place and provides a means to adjust for fluctuation in market demand. It also reduces assembly time due to the modular design for manufacturing, increases interior component flexibility and enables the customer to change the interior to meet their needs. It also enables a customer to inexpensively update vehicle features rather than purchasing a new vehicle.
An enabling technology for manufacturing the above described detachable body floor and enclosure, as well as a body skeleton structure or other components, is the so-called “quick plastic forming” technology, such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,253,588, which is hereby incorporated by reference. Using quick plastic forming, a large AA 5083 type aluminum-magnesium alloy sheet stock may be formed into a complex three-dimensional shape with high elongation regions, at high production rates. The magnesium containing aluminum sheet is heated to a forming temperature in the range of about 400° C. to 510° C. (750° F. to 950° F.). The heated sheet is stretched against a forming tool and into conformance with the forming surface of the tool by air or gas pressure against the back surface of the sheet. The gas pressure is preferably increased continuously or step-wise from 0 p.s.i. gauge at initial pressurization to a final pressure of about 250–500 p.s.i. (gauge pressure, i.e. above ambient pressure) or higher. During the first several seconds of the process up to about 1 minute of increasing pressure application, the sheet accommodates itself on the tool surface. After this initial period of pressurization to initiate stretching of the sheet, the pressure can then be increased at an even faster rate. Depending upon the size and complexity of the panel to be formed, such forming can normally be completed in a period of about 2–12 minutes.
Referring to
The floor 370 includes a seat assembly 372 supported thereon and a driver interface 374 adjacent the seat assembly to communicate vehicle control signals to the chassis 362 from a seated driver. Alternatively, the driver interface may be wireless or attached to a loose cable, like a joystick.
The body is also manufactured to include an enclosure 376 which is connected to opposing ends 378, 380 of the floor 370 so that substantially the entire length of the floor is accessible and usable space for occupants. In this configuration, usable floor space is provided on the floor forward and rearward of all wheels on the vehicle (i.e. end-to-end). The enclosure is configured to shelter a vehicle occupant. The enclosure may be a fiberglass structure.
The floor 370 is substantially flat for cooperation with the substantially flat upper surface 382 of the chassis 362. The floor 370 may be one piece or may be installed in different pieces.
As further shown in
Turning to
As shown in
The non-metal close-out panels 424, 426, 428, 430 are preferably removably attached over the body openings 416, 418, 420, 422 to facilitate interchangeability. The close-out panels may be removably attached by snaps, buttons, clasps, ties, removable fasteners such as screws, etc. Alternatively, more permanent attachments such as welds or adhesives may be used.
Further, any of the previously described body components may be provided within the enclosure 432, such as seats, driver communication interface, drive-by-wire control devices, etc.
Further benefits of this technology include readily available materials, such as localized materials, low cost for small production runs, low inventories, no need for mechanical windows, etc. Example applications may include a work truck in an emerging market, such as Africa, a military Jeep, a golf cart, personal transporter, etc.
A further feature of the invention is that seats may be positioned virtually anywhere on the body floor or chassis, including end-to-end and side-to-side. The driver may sit at the forward end of the vehicle where an engine compartment would traditionally be, in the middle of the vehicle, right side, left side, etc., and passenger seating may be provided wherever desired within the vehicle, end-to-end and side-to-side.
While the best modes for carrying out the invention have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention within the scope of the appended claims. As set forth in the claims, various features shown and described in accordance with the various different embodiments of the invention illustrated may be combined.
Chernoff, Adrian B., Borroni-Bird, Christopher E., Shabana, Mohsen D., Vitale, Robert Louis, White, Tommy E.
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